2019 Vol. 7 Issue 1 Baltimore Housing Policy Volume 7, Issue 1 Volume Scope | Scope www.richmondfed.org/community_development | Community | Community | Community Development Department Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond 1 Baltimore Housing Policy Authors The mission of Community Scope is to provide information Anne A. Burnett and Peter M. Dolkart and analysis on current and emerging issues in community development. The content of Community Scope is collected and developed by the Community Development department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. “I have lived in one house in Baltimore for nearly forty-five Community Development Department Staff years. It has changed in that time, as I have - but somehow Ann Macheras it still remains the same.” - H.L. Mencken Group Vice President, Microeconomics and Research Communications, Acting Community Affairs Officer Overview Shannon McKay This issue of Community Scope focuses on the history Community Development Research Manager, Editor of housing policy in Baltimore. Over a century ago, Emily Wavering Corcoran beginning with the tactics of restrictive zoning and Community Development Senior Research Analyst covenants, followed by mortgage “redlining” and Samuel Storey “blockbusting,” generations of minorities became Community Development Senior Research Analyst trapped in impoverished urban neighborhoods. A city Surekha Carpenter once the home for the largest free-black population Community Development Associate Research Analyst of any community in the country at the start of the Jeanne Milliken Bonds Civil War (1861), with a functioning black middle class Regional Community Development Senior Manager after the war during Reconstruction, it was also the city Peter Dolkart where some of the first housing segregation laws were Regional Community Development Manager approved in 1910.1 Verlinda Darden Regional Community Development Associate This paper explores the origins and implementation of Design: Rodney West policies and practices that made inevitable the decline A special thanks to Lisa Kenney for editing assistance. of once stable neighborhoods and communities in Baltimore. While some of these practices were overt in Community Scope is published by the Federal Reserve Bank of their intent to separate residents by race, ethnicity and Richmond. Free subscriptions and additional copies are available upon request. religion, others resulted from a legacy of incremental decisions made by people who may have been unaware To inquire about our publications, contact: The Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond of their consequences. The paper also provides an Community Development Department overview of current initiatives, almost exclusively P.O. Box 27622, Richmond, Va. 23261-7622 email: [email protected] community-based and grassroots-driven, to remake www.richmondfed.org/community_development/ a hardened landscape and to disperse and expand opportunities for quality affordable housing within the Text may be reprinted with the disclaimer in italics below. Permission from the editor is required before reprinting photos, Baltimore metropolitan region. charts and tables. Credit Community Scope and send the editor a copy of the publication in which the reprinted material appears. Volume 7, Issue 1 Volume From the Ashes The views expressed in Community Scope are those of the contributors and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve Bank Modern Baltimore emerged from the ashes of the of Richmond or the Federal Reserve System. Scope | Scope Great Fire of 1904. Most of the city was destroyed by a fire that started in a cotton warehouse and quickly spread, destroying 1,545 buildings in 30 hours and leaving more than 70 blocks and 140 acres of the | Community | Community 2 downtown area burned.2 The rebuilding of downtown The City Council responded to the Hawkins home Baltimore gave the city the opportunity to widen purchase by proposing Ordinance 610, which divided streets, reduce lot density and finally construct public the city into black blocks and white blocks: “No negro infrastructure, including modern water and sewer can move into a block in which more than half are systems. Population migration, already in progress white and no white person could move into a block with the construction of street car lines and new roads in which more than half the residents are colored.”4 for automobiles, accelerated dramatically. Affluent Sponsors of the ordinance cited the U.S. Supreme families were the first to abandon downtown out of Court’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision as the basis for the fear of future blazes and public health epidemics. With legality of the nation’s first racially restrictive zoning the subsequent municipal annexation of county land ordinance. The courts quickly invalidated this law as in 1914, the flood gates to suburbanization opened as too vague to enforce, resulting in three subsequent residents pursued lower property tax rates and front enactments of modified segregation ordinances. Each lawns. new ordinance was overturned until a final version succeeded in passing legal sufficiency in 1913.5 A new civic order formed in the hollowed burnt district. Lines of demarcation separating races and When the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately struck down ethnic communities became fixed along the street residential racial segregation ordinances in 1917,6 grid layout and in daily social relations. McCulloh Baltimore enacted a strategy used in Chicago in Street in the Mount Royal district became the racial which building and health department inspectors dividing line. Within six years of the Great Fire, African- lodged code violations against owners who ignored Americans were no longer welcome in theaters, parks, the unofficial racial exclusion rule. Communities and restaurants, hotels and department stores. Hence, property owners then imposed restrictive covenants segregation in public places was established as part of that ensured no population group by race, nationality the prevailing social order. or religion would deviate from their existing zones.7 With the outbreak of World War I halting most “The “common sense of the community” centered on the European immigration, northern U.S. factories began white race is a unit in its decision that negro invasion of recruiting African-Americans from the rural South white residential sections must cease now and forever who were eager to escape poverty and Jim Crow more.” - Samuel L. West, Baltimore City Council, Sponsor laws for jobs in the cities. By 1920, the population of of Ordinance 610 in 1910 African-Americans in Baltimore was steadily rising, and the segregation laws could not prevent blacks from moving into formerly white neighborhoods recently Residential Segregation Takes Hold abandoned by “white flight” to the new suburbs. Land Prior to 1900, predominantly African-American development companies, notably the Roland Park neighborhoods did not exist in Baltimore. Beginning Company, began to construct new neighborhoods in in the early 20th century, African-Americans from the Baltimore County that utilized legal deeds containing rural South began moving north in great numbers. binding covenants prohibiting sales to African- Early on, African-American neighborhoods were Americans and, subsequently, Jews. largely confined to the areas directly northeast and northwest of downtown. On June 9, 1910, W. Ashbie Hawkins, a civil rights attorney, purchased a row house at 1834 McCulloh Street, becoming the first African- American to own a home in any predominately white neighborhood. The Baltimore Sun referred to the purchase as a “negro invasion.”3 www.richmondfed.org/community_development | 3 BALTIMORE HOUSING POLICY concentrations of Eastern European, Jewish, Italian and Irish immigrants in east and southern Baltimore “Red areas represent those neighborhoods in which were similarly classified. the things that are now taking place in the Yellow neighborhoods, have already happened. They are The Federal Housing Administration (FHA), the characterized by detrimental influences in a pro- successor to HOLC, was tasked with promoting nounced degree, undesirable population or infiltra- homeownership by guaranteeing mortgages made tion of it.” - HOLC Street Map of Baltimore Area, 1937 by private lenders for creditworthy borrowers. FHA insisted on a rigid, white-black demarcation in housing by openly supporting racist covenants that largely excluded African-Americans — even those middle class and wealthier — by refusing to insure mortgages for minority homeowners wherever they lived. As such, African-Americans were cut off from legitimate bank mortgages, leading to worsening financial predation in Baltimore. Impact of World War II World War II brought a flood of new people to Baltimore who were attracted by the large number of war-related manufacturing and production jobs in the city. Many of Baltimore’s war-industry workers lived in deplorable conditions that were in violation of both the city’s housing and health codes. Planning officials HOLC Street Map of Baltimore Area, 19378 estimated that the city lacked at least 9,000 housing units for lower-income residents.9 Twelve public housing complexes were constructed in the late 1930s Redlining Institutionalized and mid-1940s and were racially segregated. Of those During the Great Depression, the federal government dozen, six complexes containing about 3,000 units established the Home Owners’ Loan Corporation were for whites, and six complexes containing about (HOLC) to handle emergency refinancing
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